Showing posts with label BBAW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBAW. Show all posts

Monday, February 15, 2016

Book Blogger Appreciation Week 2016 - It's Back!


I've been living under a rock so I just found out last night that this was being brought back by The Estella Society...and I signed up...11th Hour!

Today, we introduce ourselves with five books that represent us as a person. I'm going to do mine more as a defining moment, or why/how these books shaped me as a reader. Kinda sorta.


Queen of the Damned by Anne Rice. My favorite book and the book that introduced me to my favorite author of all time. It was the third book in the Vampire Chronicles series, but I read it first for some reason. Only then did my mom, who had read the first book, Interview with the Vampire, many years before, inform me about the first book. Doh! I proceeded to read the first and second book, and then read Queen of the Damned again. I have since read it four times and the first, second and fourth books twice. Of course, I will read Queen of the Damned again, and probably the others too.


The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett. Another favorite. I credit this book with igniting my huge passion for historical fiction which has become one of my top three favorite genres.


Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. This is the book that I read and loved when I was a girl, and have since read it many more times. Jo taught me that a girl could do anything and sparked my passion for writing.


Grist by Linda Little. This one is a relatively recent one, but it was my favorite read in 2014 and it touched me profoundly. I guess it was because it reminded me how blessed I am to be mother...what a precious thing it is, and also how lucky I am to be a woman in this age, able to make my own choices.


Let Me In (or Let The Right One In) by John Ajvide Lindqvist. I'm a huge horror fan. I mean, I have another blog dedicated to the horror/speculative fiction genre (Castle Macabre) so that makes it pretty obvious. I credit this book for getting me excited about horror again. I read it in 2009.

Trying to define yourself by five books is really hard. There are so many books I've loved and that have changed my life. I'm sure it's the same for many of you as well.

Once again, welcome back BBAW!

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Saturday, September 15, 2012

BBAW Day Five--Saying goodbye until next year...


Another BBAW under our belts.  Can we measure the years in BBAW festivities?  I remember my very first three years ago, when I had only been blogging for a month.  What will it be like five years from now, I wonder?  I plan to still be blogging.  How about you?

As usual, what I love the most about BBAW is the sense of community.  I didn't get to visit as many blogs this year as in past years.  Life is so busy nowadays.  But when this event is going on, it seems there is a palpable buzz in our lovely community.  I did meet some new-to-me bloggers and I'm looking forward to my future interaction with them.

I'd like to thank Amy (My Friend Amy) once again for hosting this wonderful event.

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Thursday, September 13, 2012

BBAW Day Four--Pimp that Book!


I read the books that follow before I started book blogging.  I really loved them and I feel they deserve recognition.

Before she won the Pulitzer Prize in 2011 for A Visit from the Goon Squad, Jennifer Egan wrote a wonderful book called The Keep.  What can only be called a gothic story with a twist, I absolutely loved this book.  If you like Jennifer Egan's writing, or even if you haven't read her yet, you really must read this book.




From National Book Award finalist Jennifer Egan, author of "Look at Me" ("Brilliantly unnerving . . . A haunting, sharp, splendidly articulate novel" --"The New York Times"), a spellbinding work of literary suspense enacted in a chilling psychological landscape--a dazzling tour de force. 
Two cousins, irreversibly damaged by a childhood prank whose devastating consequences changed both their lives, reunite twenty years later to renovate a medieval castle in Eastern Europe, a castle steeped in blood lore and family pride. Built over a secret system of caves and tunnels, the castle and its violent history invoke and subvert all the elements of a gothic past: twins, a pool, an old baroness, a fearsome tower. In an environment of extreme paranoia, cut off from the outside world, the men reenact the signal event of their youth, with even more catastrophic results. And as the full horror of their predicament unfolds, a prisoner, in jail for an unnamed crime, recounts an unforgettable story--a story about two cousins who unite to renovate a castle--that brings the crimes of the past and present into piercing relation.
Egan's relentlessly gripping page-turner plays with rich forms--ghost story, love story, gothic--and transfixing themes: the undertow of history, the fate of imagination in the cacophony of modern life, the uncanny likeness between communications technology and the supernatural. In a narrative that shifts seamlessly from an ancient European castle to a maximum security prison, Egan conjures a world from which escape is impossible and where the keep--the last stand, the final holdout, the place you run to when the walls are breached--is both everything worth protecting and the very thing that must be surrendered in order to survive.
A novel of fierce intelligence and velocity; a bravura performance from a writer of consummate skill and style.


Long before I had ever heard of Stieg Larsson and his famous Millennium trilogy, there was another Swedish author who knocked me out with her book, Blackwater.  Swedish authors really know their stuff.  This thriller was so astounding and the characters were so real.  I highly recommend this book.



On Midsummer's Eve, 1974, Annie Raft arrives with her daughter Mia in the remote Swedish village of Blackwater to join her lover Dan on a nearby commune. On her journey through the deep forest, she sumbles upon the site of a grisly double murder--a crime that will remain unsolved for nearly twenty years, until the day Annie sees her grown daughter in the arms of one man she glimpsed in the forest that eerie midsummer night.

Like Gorky Park and Smilla's Sense of Snow, Blackwater is a unique trhiller in which the hearts and minds of the characters are as strikingly compelling as the exotic northern landscape that envelops them. 

This one will probably seem obvious, as I'm sure many may have already read it, but for those who haven't, you simply must read Life of Pi by Yann Martel.  Do it now! Before the film comes out.  It is one of the most magnificent books I've ever read.



Life of Pi is a masterful and utterly original novel that is at once the story of a young castaway who faces immeasurable hardships on the high seas, and a meditation on religion, faith, art and life that is as witty as it is profound. Using the threads of all of our best stories, Yann Martel has woven a glorious spiritual adventure that makes us question what it means to be alive, and to believe.

Growing up in Pondicherry, India, Piscine Molitor Patel -- known as Pi -- has a rich life. Bookish by nature, young Pi acquires a broad knowledge of not only the great religious texts but of all literature, and has a great curiosity about how the world works. His family runs the local zoo, and he spends many of his days among goats, hippos, swans, and bears, developing his own theories about the nature of animals and how human nature conforms to it. Pi’s family life is quite happy, even though his brother picks on him and his parents aren’t quite sure how to accept his decision to simultaneously embrace and practise three religions -- Christianity, Hinduism, and Islam.

But despite the lush and nurturing variety of Pi’s world, there are broad political changes afoot in India, and when Pi is sixteen his parents decide that the family needs to escape to a better life. Choosing to move to Canada, they close the zoo, pack their belongings, and board a Japanese cargo ship called the Tsimtsum. Travelling with them are many of their animals, bound for zoos in North America. However, they have only just begun their journey when the ship sinks, taking the dreams of the Patel family down with it. Only Pi survives, cast adrift in a lifeboat with the unlikeliest of travelling companions: a zebra, an orang-utan, a hyena, and a 450-pound Royal Bengal tiger named Richard Parker.

Thus begins Pi Patel’s epic, 227-day voyage across the Pacific, and the powerful story of faith and survival at the heart of Life of Pi. Worn and scared, oscillating between hope and despair, Pi is witness to the playing out of the food chain, quite aware of his new position within it. When only the tiger is left of the seafaring menagerie, Pi realizes that his survival depends on his ability to assert his own will, and sets upon a grand and ordered scheme to keep from being Richard Parker’s next meal.

As the days pass, Pi fights both boredom and terror by throwing himself into the practical details of surviving on the open sea -- catching fish, collecting rain water, protecting himself from the sun -- all the while ensuring that the tiger is also kept alive, and knows that Pi is the key to his survival. The castaways face gruelling pain in their brushes with starvation, illness, and the storms that lash the small boat, but there is also the solace of beauty: the rainbow hues of a dorado’s death-throes, the peaceful eye of a looming whale, the shimmering blues of the ocean’s swells. Hope is fleeting, however, and despite adapting his religious practices to his daily routine, Pi feels the constant, pressing weight of despair. It is during the most hopeless and gruelling days of his voyage that Pi whittles to the core of his beliefs, casts off his own assumptions, and faces his underlying terrors head-on.

As Yann Martel has said in one interview, “The theme of this novel can be summarized in three lines. Life is a story. You can choose your story. And a story with an imaginative overlay is the better story.” And for Martel, the greatest imaginative overlay is religion. “God is a shorthand for anything that is beyond the material -- any greater pattern of meaning.” In Life of Pi, the question of stories, and of what stories to believe, is front and centre from the beginning, when the author tells us how he was led to Pi Patel and to this novel: in an Indian coffee house, a gentleman told him, “I have a story that will make you believe in God.” And as this novel comes to its brilliant conclusion, Pi shows us that the story with the imaginative overlay is also the story that contains the most truth.

If you do happen to pick up one of these books upon my recommendation, I would love it if you would stop by and let me know what you thought. =O)

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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

BBAW Day Three--Book Blogging Love


I am really late with this and I do apologize, but better late than never I guess.  I'm not going to rehash what I say every year because I think everyone that knows me knows that I love the sense of community that we have among book bloggers.  This year I want to take it a step further and show some love for some of the things that bring us together as a community.  That would be read-a-thons, blog events, and reading challenges.  Three years ago, when I first started this blog, the only read-a-thons I remember being around were Dewey's 24 Hour Read-a-Thon (which I credit with starting it all with the read-a-thon phenomenon...thank you, Dewey!) and the Thankfully Reading Weekend.  Nowadays, it seems there is a read-a-thon almost every week, and mine are some of them.  Not that I'm complaining! Every day is a read-a-thon for me. ;O)  And then we have reading challenges.  Oh my goodness! Every year around this time, the reading challenges for the next year start rolling out.  I can never resist signing up for them.  They're so clever and, well...challenging.  Mixed in throughout the year we have the other fun challenges.  Carl's Once Upon a Time and Readers.Imbibing.Peril, Fall into Reading and Spring Reading Thing (which somehow I missed this year) at Callapidder Days, Bloggiesta, and so many others.  And reading/book-related events like all the fun Halloween events and Christmas events like Book Blogger's Holiday Swap.  And, of course, BBAW and Armchair BEA.  I know I've missed some, I'm sure, but you get my point.  We are a community of joiners, but not in a bad way.  We're joining like-minded individuals and doing something we love almost more than anything (not more than our kids, spouses, pets, I would think...I hope...LOL!).


I alone host many events each year.  I host four seasonal read-a-thons a year.  I finally had to create a dedicated blog, Seasons of Reading.  I host three perpetual and one long-term reading challenge.  Plus, a Christmas Reading Challenge every year and a Halloween event on my horror blog, Castle Macabre and a Christmas event (and Christmas in July) at my Christmas blog.  And I hosted a write-a-thon in August.  The rest of the year alone, I'm hosting my FrightFall Read-a-Thon, the event, Season of the Witch and Witchy mini-reading challenge (at Castle Macabre), another write-a-thon in November (and I'm proposing a review book read-a-thon as well), and my Christmas Reading Challenge and Sharing the Joy event at my Christmas blog, The Christmas Spirit.  People are always asking me how I do it (I'm a mom, I work from home, I'm working on a novel) and some probably wonder why too.  I'll tell you why.  It's not to gain followers or even for any sense of recognition.  I just love the sense of community that's involved with book-related events and I have met some of the most wonderful people.  That's what makes it worthwhile for me.  That's what book blogging means to me.

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Tuesday, September 11, 2012

BBAW Day Two--I Interview Meg from A Bookish Affair


Quick thanks to Risa for pointing out that I neglected to include a link to Meg's blog.  Please click the image above to visit A Bookish Affair.

1. You started blogging in 2011. Can you tell me what led you to book blogging? 
I've always read a lot. Before I started book blogging, I kept track of what I read through Goodreads. I saw a couple people that I had "met" through Goodreads had book blogs and check them out and decided that book blogging was something that I could do too!

2. What is your go-to genre--the genre which you know almost every book you pick up you will like? What makes this genre your top choice? 
For me, Historical Fiction is probably my go-to genre. I'm a history buff and I think that HF is a fun way to learn something. I love seeing how people lived in different time periods and I love seeing how some of the things that we struggle with today are things that people struggled with way back when. It makes you feel a little less alone in the world.

3. If you were to branch out from your reading comfort zone, in what direction would you go? Book blogging has actually broadened my reading a lot. I've always been an eclectic reader but book blogging has opened me up to genres like Young Adult Fiction and Romance. I love that this community has done that for me!


4. Can you give me your top three favorite books of all time? 
Oh man, this is like choosing children. Here are three books (in no particular order) that I love a lot.
1. Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia-Marquez (this love story is amazing, so amazing).
2. The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini (this is the book that I recommend to everyone I meet)
3. Running with Scissors by Augusten Burroughs (this book has the special designation of being one that I read in one sitting while at Starbucks; truly the marking of a special book)

5. Tell us a little about your life outside of blogging. 
I live in Maryland with my husband and two kitties. We just bought a 103 year old house so we've been spending a lot of time fixing up the house (see, history has a way of sneaking into all aspects of my life!!!). I work full time but in my free time, I love reading (duh!), entertaining friends and family, and traveling.


6. I know you are a cat lover, like me. A lot of my readers are also cat lovers. Can you tell us about your kitties?
I have two kitties: Totoro and Winston Churchill (oh, history, there you are again). Totoro and Winston are litter mates. I adopted Totoro about 7 years ago from a no kill cat shelter. I only adopted Totoro because I was in college and didn't think I could take care of two cats. I finished college and moved back home so Totoro got used to being with my parents' cats. When I moved out, Totoro was really lonely so I went back to the same no kill shelter and Totoro's brother was still there so I adopted him. At that point, about 3 years had passed since the cats had seen each other. It took them about a day and then they were ready to play and cuddle with each other. I'm completely convinced that they remembered each other!

7. How about a little this or that? 
rock or country? Rock
Fall or Spring? Fall is definitely my favorite season.
Halloween or Christmas? Christmas
coffee or tea? Ooo, that's hard. Coffee in the morning. Tea at night.
cake or pie? Pie (especially apple or peanut butter)
eBooks or paper bound books? or audio books? Paper bound books are the best!
classics or contemporary novels? I have a great fear of classics so contemporary on this one.
Jane Austen or Charles Dickens? Charles Dickens
read-a-thon or reading challenge? Reading challenge
reading or breathing? (I couldn't resist!) Another tough question. Being a former high school swimmer, I can still hold my breath for a really long time so as long as I would be allowed to just hold my breath while reading, I'd be okay :)

I really enjoyed 'meeting' Meg and learning more about her.  Aren't her kitties just lovely?  I'm hoping she will consider joining us for Cat Thursday. =O)

Who did you meet today?

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Monday, September 10, 2012

BBAW Day One--Appreciate!

Today's topic: Appreciation! There are no awards this year, but it can still be hard to navigate the huge universe of book blogging. Share with your readers some of the blogs you enjoy reading daily and why.

There are a great many blogs that I enjoy reading and I would like to mention every single one, but logically, that could take all day.  So, I will highlight a few of my favorites.  

Ryan at Wordsmithonia - I like to refer to Ryan as my book blogging mentor.  He is the reason that I started a book blog a little over three years ago.  Since then, we have developed a great friendship.  I love reading his blog.  His reviews are always entertaining and spot on and his weekly feature, Favorite Fictional Character, is always a blast.  Plus, he shares my love for Christmas and is one of the biggest supporters of my year round Christmas blog.

Heather at Between the Covers - I met Heather on Twitter during my weekly TuesBookTalk chats probably over two years ago.  She is now my only loyal participant who meets with me every Tuesday night and that's only one of the reason why she rocks.  We have become great friends.  She started her book blog in 2011 and she writes some of the most insightful reviews I've ever read.  The girl reads a ton! I can't get over how many books she reads in a month.

Melissa at Must Read Faster - When I think of Melissa, I think "snarky wit"....she is such a funny person.  She is one of my most loyal read-a-thon participants.  Like me, she LOVES read-a-thons.  Her blog posts, both reviews and various read-a-thon updates, are always entertaining and fun.  To put it in words she would use, she blogs "like a boss!"

Jillian at A Room of One's Own - I met Jillian when she participated in my Winter's Respite Read-a-Thon this past January.  She writes some of the most interesting blog posts I've read.  And she's the originator of The Classics Club.  That in itself is enough reason to love her.

Krista at Book Review Club - Krista is another blogger I met fairly recently and again, during one of my read-a-thons.  You could not meet a nicer person.  Krista has five kids and home schools all of them.  I don't know how she does that and keeps up with her blog and her kids' blog, Lollipops and Books.  She always makes her blog posts fun and she shares my love of the scary in books.

I'd also like to do a special shout out to all the blogs who participate in my weekly meme, Cat Thursday.  You all are truly awesome! It's so easy to love fellow cat lovers.

Okay, so this is just a smattering of the blogs that I enjoy.  I follow a ton and though I'm not always the best about commenting, I do enjoy reading what they all have to say.  If I did not mention you here, just know that you are loved and appreciated too. =O)

What blogs do you appreciate?  If you'd like to participate in BBAW, click the button below to find out how.



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Friday, September 16, 2011

BBAW Day 5: Blogging



Three tried and true practices essential for every blogger? Hmmm! These are three four I firmly believe in...

1. Stay true to yourself. You know how your mom would always say, "Just be yourself." Well, the same holds true in blogging. Yes, you want to please your readers, but just like in real life, you can't (and shouldn't) change the way you are completely just to please someone else. If you start doing everything on your blog for everyone else and the way they think it should be, instead of doing things the way you want...well, that my friends is going to lead you down the path to blogger burn-out...and it's ugly, very ugly!

2. No judgement. "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." If some of your regulars stop dropping by or some of the blogs that you follow stop posting consistently, don't judge. If you visit a blog and you don't like something about it. Perhaps the background is too dark or the font is wanky...or whatever other thing that might annoy you. Don't judge. Take a moment and think how you would feel if someone was grumbling about your posting inconsistency, or your excessive meme participation, or your sidebars being cluttered, and then swallow your judgement and move on. Kindness and acceptance will get you a long way in blogging.

3. Have fun! Remember why you started book blogging in the first place. It was fun! Remember that you're not being paid and no one can fire you so if you #@%& up, own it and move on. When it stops being fun, you're headed down that ugly road again...you know the one. 

4. I'm adding a #4 because I think this is important too. Reciprocate. If you notice someone commenting frequently on your blog, head on over and comment on their blog. Build a relationship with those who take the time to visit. And when someone follows, again...reciprocate. I know it can get overwhelming, but the people who went out of their way to follow already have something in common with you because they liked your blog enough to follow. See, the relationship has already started! I have been remiss with this of late because I went on vacation for two weeks in August and I just can't seem to catch up. Bear with me, folks! I will get back to my old reciprocating self. =O)

I'm not sure if these are trends and tools, but I sure would like to adopt/implement them in the near future, and they are...

1. Write the review immediately after finishing the book. No more procrastinating. Now granted, I know sometimes there are constraints to doing this, like being at work or finishing a book while in bed (I'm not going to get out of the bed and write a review. LOL), but I'm talking about not waiting a week after finishing the book to write the review, not because I have so many other reviews to write, but because I'm too damn lazy to sit down and do it (incidentally, I don't do this with review books, just my own...which is probably a good thing). Any pointers?

2. Reading faster. Actually, this should read 'stop wasting time so I can read faster'. Any tips in this department? Yeah, I figured it was a lost cause. *sigh*

Thursday, September 15, 2011

BBAW Day 4: Reading and Blogging


Because I'm not feeling particularly creative today, I'm not going to be very original in the way I field the questions regarding today's BBAW topic. I hope you will forgive me. *sheepish grin*

Has book blogging changed the way you read?

Yes, definitely. Before, I would just walk to my shelves and pick a book...or, because I own so many books, I had slips of paper with the letters of the alphabet and I would pick one. Whichever letter I picked would be the initial of an author and I would pick a book accordingly. Ahhh, the good ole days! Now, I'm not being negative here because I love reviewing books and discovering new-to-me authors, but sometimes I sigh wistfully when I think about those more simple times.

Have you discovered books you never would have apart from book blogging?

Yes. I have discovered self-published books and Indie books. Some (most) of them have been absolutely wonderful. I've also discovered new genres like steampunk and dystopian (not saying that I had never read a dystopian book in the past, but back then I didn't know what to call them). I have also had my obsession love for historical fiction enhanced by learning about the many excellent and diverse historical authors out there.

How has book blogging affected your book acquisition habits?

This hasn't changed too much. I'm still a huge fan of library sales and I have to admit that, due to my tight budget most of the time, I usually acquire most of my books via these sales or from Goodwill. One thing that has happened though is that I win a lot of giveaways...for books and gift cards. So, I've actually acquired tons of books that I otherwise would not have if not for blogging. I'd like to take this opportunity to once again thank all the blogs/authors I have won books from in the past two years. =O)

Have you made new connections with other readers because of book blogging? 

I have made so many connections with other readers in the past two years. I know in the real world there is no way I would have ever met so many like-minded and diverse people. So many fellow readers/bloggers have opened my eyes to new and exciting genres and books and I am truly grateful for it. I really can't see my life ever being without the book blogging community and all of the lovers of reading I have met and interacted with not only within book blogging, but also via social media. I think we should all move to a private island and establish our own utopian society! Who's with me?!


Tuesday, September 13, 2011

BBAW Day 2: Interview with Shauna at Reading and Ruminations

Please join me today in welcoming Shauna from Reading and Ruminations.  It was a pleasure interviewing her.  I have found a new-to-me blogger who shares many of my interests.


1. You've been blogging since 2005. Wow! Can you tell me what led you to book blogging and how you combat blogger burn-out after so many years?

I started my book blog over on LiveJournal as a part of a New Years Resolution in 2005, but it didn't become Reading and Ruminations until 2008. I started because a good friend had likewise started a book blog, and I'm a bit of a joiner sometimes. Back then, though, book blogging wasn't like it is now. I just posted about the things I was reading- usually classics I was reading for school. I've always been a bit of a sporadic poster, and that actually helps combat the burn-out quite a lot. If I don't feel like blogging, I don't post. I used to apologize all the time for it, but I don't now. I also don't accept many review books. That helps as well.

2. What is your go-to genre--the genre which you know almost every book you pick up you will like? What makes this genre your top choice?
I love classic literature. I love reading stories that are time-tested, that people have read for years and years, and even with the changes to society in the meantime, they still endure. I also love literary fiction and stories that get down to the nitty-gritty of human nature. And my third kind of go-to genre is, like you, historical fiction, and for some of the same reasons (learning more about a previous time, even if there are some inaccuracies). History means so much to me; in a lot of ways, I feel like it gave me a future. I studied it in school, and I'm pretty sure if I had studied almost anything else, I would have eventually dropped out, especially given some of the things that were going on in my life at the time. And I'm the first person on my dad's side of the family to graduate from college, so I'm glad I didn't drop out. 

3. If you were to branch out from your reading comfort zone, in what direction would you go?
Hm. I used to read a lot of mysteries and thrillers, but I think I've grown out of those and wouldn't go back. I think I'd try to read more non-fiction. History books are pretty much the only non-fiction I currently read, but I'd like to try to learn more about music and a few other things. Actually, I've been interested in learning a lot more about feminism and women's studies, so I'd probably read a lot more about that. 

4. Can you give me your top three favorite books of all time?
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen is my number one all time favorite. I know it's cliched to say that, but I feel like it really opened me up to literature, and not just mass market fiction. It also ended up being a way for meet people online- people I've been friends with for more than eight years now, and who I value and cherish immensely.

The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas I think is probably my second favorite. There are only four books I was assigned in high school that I remember fondly, and this is one of them. (The other three are To Kill a Mockingbird, The Great Gatsby and A Farewell to Arms). I own copies of all of them now- and The Three Musketeers is the one that's dog-eared to the point of falling apart.

I had a hard time deciding on my third, but I think it's Fingersmith by Sarah Waters. I don't remember how I first came across it- I think I found it browsing the stacks at the library where I was working at the time, and I was intrigued by the cover with the white gloves. The first part was slow going and a little Dickensian, but then as I kept reading, it really made me sit up and pay attention. It was riveting, and I adored it. I recently recommended it to one of my close friends, and she was complaining about it going slow. I kept telling her to just keep reading- and I couldn't resist the urge to say "I told you so" when she sent me a text message at one in the morning a few weeks ago that said "Fingersmith just got reeeeaaaaallllllyyyyy good!"

5. Tell us a little about your life outside of blogging.

Hm, let's see. I'm a lifelong California girl who lives about half an hour outside of Sacramento. I work as a paralegal for a single-attorney firm (that probably does the volume of work of a bigger practice)- I'm the litigation paralegal, so I spend a lot of time drafting legal documents. I'm single, no children, and I live with a roommate and her cat. I have a cat of my own, but she's not really an indoor cat so she lives with my parents. My non-blogging, non-reading hobbies are crocheting, vegging in front of the TV and rooting for my favorite teams: the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Seattle Seahawks and the Oregon Ducks.  I'm also on Twitter as @shootingstarr7.

6. How about a little this or that?

rock or country?  Rock. Always. 
cats or dogs?  Cats, but just barely. I love dogs, too.
Fall or Spring?  Fall. Sweaters, scarves and pumpkins.
coffee or tea?  Tea. 
cake or pie?  Cake. 
Queen Elizabeth I or Marie Antoinette?  Elizabeth I
classic/horror mash-up or classic retelling?  Classic retelling
Jane Austen or Charles Dickens?  Jane Austen. She's my all-time favorite. 
read-a-thon or reading challenge?  Read-a-thon. I fail at reading challenges. 
reading or breathing? (I couldn't resist!)  Hehe. Breathing by a nose. 

Thank you for joining me today, Shauna! I have enjoyed learning all about you and I'm looking forward to reading your blog on a regular basis. =O)

TTBA Weekly News, Mailbox Monday, BBAW: Community

This feature was inspired by It's Monday! What are you reading? hosted by Sheila at Book Journey and by The Sunday Salon.


I am SO late with this post! I just can't ever seem to get it together, especially lately.  It seems I'm running behind on everything.  I do apologize for this late posting for BBAW in particular.


Community

I belong to a community! It's a community that has become very important to me.  Many people outside of the realm of book blogging probably would not understand.  They might say things like, "How can you be friends with someone you met online?" or "Get a life...you spend too much time blogging."  The two things they do not understand are that 1) online friendship is not as impersonal as many people think and 2) book blogging is not just blogging.  It's the appreciation of the written word, one of the most important things in this world of ours, and sharing it with a community of like-minded individuals.  I have met some of the most wonderful and caring people in my short two years of book blogging.  Some who I consider to be the very best of friends.  From Ryan at Wordsmithonia, who started me on this journey in the first place, to all the bloggers I interact with regularly (you know who you are) and my weekly Cat Thursday participants...these are people who I would miss if I ever left the blogging world (God forbid).  So, you might ask me why I host four read-a-thons a year or why I launched yet another blog or even why I have a weekly meme called Cat Thursday (cat lovers understand).  It's not just because I'm not happy unless I'm biting off more than I can chew (LOL) and it's not only because I love read-a-thons or hoarding blogs or even my love of cats.  It's because I enjoy interacting with these good people I have met and, I hope someday, that I will get the opportunity to meet at least a few of them in person.  But if I don't, I'll take their impersonal online friendship any day of the week.

EVENTS

Have you checked out the blog launch event and giveaway at my new horror blog, Castle Macabre?  On Tuesday, author Scott M. Baker is giving away print copies of The Vampire Hunters trilogy.  I also have more giveaways and author appearances coming this month.  My Frightful Fall Read-a-Thon is being hosted over there as well.  Details and sign-up are HERE.


TuesBookTalk Read-a-Longs on Twitter (@tuesbooktalk  #tuesbooktalk) and on Goodreads chose fantasy for September's genre.  Our discussion starts Tuesday, September 13 on Twitter at 10:30pm ET/9:30pm CT.  You do not have to join us on Twitter.  Feel free to share your thoughts in the Goodreads group if you can't make the chat on Twitter.  Get the full reading schedule HERE.  This month we are reading:

WHAT I'M READING

Finished since last week:
Captivity by Deborah Noyes (review coming soon)
The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey (review coming soon)
Eromenos by Melanie McDonald  my review
Danny Marble and the Application for Non-Scary Things by Jessica McHugh  my review

Currently reading:
The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss
The Midwife's Tale by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich (still plugging away at this one!)


Mailbox Monday was created by Marcia and is currently on tour.  This month's host is Amused by Books  (want to read a book description?  Clicking the book covers will take you to the book's page on Amazon)

BookBox: embed book widget, share book list
BOOKMOOCH:
Making Children Mind Without Losing Yours by Dr. Kevin Leman

LIBRARY SALE:
Hunger's Brides by Paul Anderson
City of God by Beverly Swerling
The Coral Thief by Rebecca Stott
The Winter Queen by Jane Stevenson
Home by Marilynne Robinson
Freedom by Jonathan Franzen
The Walk by Richard Paul Evans

Friday, September 17, 2010

BBAW CONCLUSION: FUTURE TREASURES

Well, today is the final day of BBAW...it went by so fast! A big thanks to Amy and all the people who helped her organize and run such a great event.  I have enjoyed visiting with other bloggers and hearing from bloggers who visited my blog.  The giveaways were awesome and the awards allowed us to cheer on the blogs we love and learn about new ones who are considered the cream of the crop.  So...a successful BBAW and now it's time to look forward to the coming year.

We are supposed to talk about our goals for our blog for the coming year.  I don't really have any lofty goals here at The True Book Addict, but here are a few things I'd like to work on:
  • Write and post reviews in a more timely manner.  In other words...STOP PROCRASTINATING!
  • Resume the posting of my feature, Addicted to the Past, and get back into posting the weekly Favorite Fictional Character hosted by Ryan at Wordsmithonia.
  • Try to read and review more books from my monstrous TBR iceberg (which are all books I own in my personal library of 1700+ books...that is fiction alone!) and limit the amount of books I accept for review.
  • Join less reading challenges...I mean, who was I kidding!
  • Try to be less of a lurker and more of a commenter at other blogs.
  • And, most importantly, stay true to myself in every aspect of my blogging.
I hope everyone enjoyed BBAW as much as I did.  And to those who visited here, thanks! I hope it was a great experience and I hope you will stop by again in the future!

BBAW DAY 4: FORGOTTEN TREASURES

BBAW set this theme for Day 4: “Sure we’ve all read about Freedom and Mockingjay but we likely have a book we wish would get more attention by book bloggers, whether it’s a forgotten classic or under marketed contemporary fiction. This is your chance to tell the community why they should consider reading this book!”

I apologize for posting late again.  I spent all day yesterday and last night entering Blogmania giveaways!  I'm surprised I can even type...I think I have carpal tunnel...LOL! Anyway, I did do some thinking on this topic and I thought back to a few books that I read before I started my book blog that were so great that they have really stuck with me.  I never hear these mentioned around the blogs, even from bloggers that tend to read books that have been out for awhile.  So...without further ado, I give you....

Mary Reilly by Valerie Martin

This book is a retelling of the Jekyll and Hyde story from a maid's point of view.  Some of you may remember the film of the same name that starred Julia Roberts and John Malkovich.  The movie was not well-liked, but I actually liked it.  It was very atmospheric.  Naturally, I sought out the book when I found out the movie was based on a novel.  The book is better than the movie, of course.  What I liked about this story is how the character of Mary is deftly inserted into the story as more than just an average victim (although she's not a victim in the traditional sense).  Through Mary, we see more of the kindness of Dr. Jekyll and more of the pure evil of Mr. Hyde.  And Mary has had a tough life herself, which further adds to the story.  In the afterword, it is implied that this story was based on the actual journals of a real Mary Reilly.  Whether this is fact or just another part of the book, I'm not sure.  But it adds to the story.  And the three possible explanations that are given for the mysterious case of Jekyll and Hyde just make the story more intriguing.

Blackwater by Kerstin Ekman

From goodreads:

On Midsummer's Eve, 1974, Annie Raft arrives with her daughter Mia in the remote Swedish village of Blackwater to join her lover Dan on a nearby commune. On her journey through the deep forest, she stumbles upon the site of a grisly double murder--a crime that will remain unsolved for nearly twenty years, until the day Annie sees her grown daughter in the arms of one man she glimpsed in the forest that eerie midsummer night.

I had to give you a synopsis on this one because it's been several years since I read it.  However, it's such a good book that, although some plot details may be forgotten, the overall terrific storytelling of Ekman has stayed with me.  Swedish authors continue to impress me.  John Ajvide Lindqvist (Let Me In or Let the Right One In), and Stieg Larssen (The Millenium Trilogy) are a couple of note.  Based on this book, Ekman deserves her place among them.  She has a few more novels translated to English and I can't wait to read them.

The Keep by Jennifer Egan

From goodreads:

...two cousins reunite twenty years after a childhood prank gone wrong changed their lives and sent them on their separate ways. "Cousin Howie," the formerly uncool, strange, and pasty ("he looked like a guy the sun wouldn't touch") cousin has become a blond, tan, and married millionaire with a generous spirit. He invites his cousin Danny (who as an insecure teenager left him hurt and helpless in a cave for three days) to help him renovate an old castle in Germany. To reveal too much would ruin the story...

It's definitely a creepy read.  It has a genuinely gothic feel, which isn't surprising since it's partially set in an old castle that "Cousin Howie" is renovating to make a luxury hotel.  I really can't say too much for fear of giving away important events, but suffice it to say that there is a twist that will take your breath away...well, it did mine anyway. 


These are three of my forgotten treasures, but not really forgotten because their ultimate essence has stayed with me over the years.  I highly recommend that you check them out.  And please don't come back and kill me if you end up hating them!  =O)

Thursday, September 16, 2010

BBAW DAY 3: UNEXPECTED TREASURES

Little late with my post, but BBAW's day three themed topic is:

Book bloggers can be some of the most influential people around!  Today we invite you to share with us a book or genre you tried due to the influence of another blogger.  What made you cave in to try something new and what was the experience like?

Because of book blogs I was introduced to the dystopian genre.  I know I probably read this genre in the past, but I never knew that it had its own classification until I started blogging.  I really was not influenced by a particular blog to discover this, but actually was influenced by many blogs in the book blog blogosphere.  Here are the dystopian books I have read since starting my blog last year (click on the titles to read my reviews):

The Road--Cormac McCarthy

Winter's End--Jean-Claude Mourlevat

The Hunger Games--Suzanne Collins









Happy BBAW!

- See more at: http://www.techtrickhome.com/2013/02/show-comment-box-above-comments-on.html#sthash.TjHz2Px9.dpuf